Friday, December 9, 2016

I have to admit that I don’t read
a lot of new fiction these days. Non-fiction (mostly true crime and music and
movie bios) provide the bulk of my printed nourishment, along with a plethora
of magazines and the odd comic book of course (online blogs and articles can be
great and rewarding, but I still love the process of going to a newsstand and
picking out a stack of public transport reading for the week). When I do decide
to read fiction, I usually scan through my library or the shelves of a
second-hand bookstore and pick out a thin old vintage horror or crime
paperback, or film tie-in novelization, to keep me occupied for a weekend.

Having said that, I ordered a
copy of Eric Red’s White Knuckle (2015
Samhain Publishing)from Amazonafter reading a few rave notices from
people whose opinions I usually respect and find reliable, and after diving just
a few pages into the book I had become seduced and lost within its pages. White Knuckle is a gripping thriller
about a prolific, truck driving serial killer who has spent over forty years
criss-crossing the United States, abducting his victims and keeping them bound,
helpless and terrified within a secret steel chamber installed underneath his
big rig. A young, novice female FBI agent teams up with a seasoned, ex-con trucker
to cruise the interstates in the hope of finding the maniac who has been
leaving bodies all across the country. It quickly turns into a personal game of
cat and mouse for both agent and killer, with each of them seemingly gaining
the upper hand in turn, until the story reaches its frenzied climax.

Fast-paced, violent and
gruesome, but with a true sense of character and a remarkable detail for life
on the open road, White Knuckle is a
cracking good read, with a few moments of genuine tension that help the book live
up to its title (White Knuckle is the CB handle for the killer). The book has a
real cinematic feel to it, not surprising as author Red has penned a number of
excellent screenplays over the years, including The Hitcher (1986), Near
Dark (1987), Blue Steel (1990)and Body Parts (1991, which he also directed).

I had a few minor quibbles
with the story, mostly some moments of convenience and the odd detour into
territory that seemed a bit far-fetched and over-the-top compared to what the bulk
of the book delivers, but they did nothing to diminish my enjoyment of White Knuckle. Highly recommended if
you feel like reading a gritty, pulpy thriller that contains elements of movies
like Duel (1971), Breakdown (1997), Silence of the Lambs (1991)and
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), yet
combines them into something wholly of its own. I’ll definitely be checking out
more of Eric Red’s horror fiction in the near future.

Friday, November 25, 2016

Had a late-night screening of the new Grindhouse Blu-ray release of David Durston's infamous hippie horror film I Drink Your Blood (1971) last night, and what a magnificent job they have done on it! The beautiful, lurid seediness of the film has never looked clearer than on Grindhouse's HD transfer of the original X-rated cut of the film, and they have packed this two disc release with a stunning array of special features, including the original theatrical cut, deleted scenes (including the original and more downbeat ending), trailer and radio spot, the German Super 8mm digest home movie editions, interviews and footage from recent drive-in and grindhouse screenings, and so much more, including HD bonus feature films of I Eat Your Skin (a B&W 1964 Del Tenney film which was picked-up and retitled as a co-feature to I Drink Your Blood) and Blue Sextet, David Durston's rare psychedelic shocker from 1969.

The first 3000 copies of the Blu-ray also include a cool, carded I Drink Your Blood horror hypo syringe, so you can play your own version of "Let's give rabies to the dirty hippies" in your own home!

This is the definitive release of this remakable exploitation film, a true product of its era and not just a great counterculture horror but the best grindhouse film the capture the vibe of the Manson Family killings, which had occured two years earlier and was still very fresh in the public's mind (and fears). Looking forward to the upcoming local release of the disc from Ex Film, who will also be putting it out as a limited edition VHS in tribute to the original early-eighties home video release of the movie on the Media label.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Super 8mm German home movie digest versions of I Drink Your Blood(1971), released in that country by Rex Films. Great to see these included as an extra on the amazing new two-disc Blu-ray release of this hippie horror classic from Grindhouse Releasing, which I am currently wading through.

So reads the poster tagline for
Andrea Bianchi’s 1981 Italian zombie film Burial Ground. Gee, I wonder if that
tagline was inspired by the memorable poster blurb for a certain 1978 George A.
Romero zombie classic? Alternately known as The Nights of Terror, Zombi Horror, The Zombie Dead and Zombie 3, so much of Burial Ground seems to borrow from
other, better known (and just plain better) movies, including Lucio Fulci’s
1979 masterpiece Zombie/Zombie Flesh Eaters (to which this was peddled as an
official sequel in some parts of the world). Despite this, Burial Ground winds
up being something completely unique and of its own, an utterly delirious,
wacky and gory movie that roars along at a great pace and never fails to
entertain, containing pretty much everything you could possibly want from an
Italian grindhouse zombie flick from this era.

Amazingly, I had never sat down
to watch this film before, so experiencing it for the first time via the new Blu-ray
release from Severin Films was a complete treat and a real eye-opener. The 2K
scan and restoration makes the mud-bleeding zombies look suitably slimy and
gross while the film often looks quite stunning thanks to it being filmed at
the beautiful old Villa Parisi (a location used in quite a number of Italian
genre flicks since the 1960s).The film
pretty much dispenses with any plot establishment or character development and
gets stuck into the gut-munching zombie action almost from the get-go, and
rarely lets up from there. As if the film isn’t jaw-dropping enough as it is, Bianchi
and screenwriter Piero Regnoli take things even further by casting the
strange-looking Peter Bark, then 25 but playing a 15 year-old kid who has a
sexual attraction to his mother (played by the voluptuous Mariangela Giordano) and at one point even kisses
her on the lips and fondles her bare breast while she is trying to comfort him
in the midst of all the chaos and horror taking place around them!

Burial Ground also benefits from a great synth/electronica score by Elsio Mancuso
and Burt Rexon, which really adds to the film’s ambience and helps give it a
unique feel. The print on the new Severin Blu-ray actually contains the title
of The Nights of Terror. Extras include several featurette interviews with producer
Gabriele Crisanti and a number of actors involved with the film, a modern tour
of Villa Parisi, trailer and some deleted and extended scenes. Audio has
English dubbed or Italian language tracks (with English subtitle options).

Saturday, November 19, 2016

“America
is the only industrialized nation with the high murder rate of countries at
civil war, like Cambodia and Nicaragua.”

With that opening statement,
delivered in a grim, deliberate, and monotone voice by narrator Chuck Riley,
begins one of the most brutal, distressing and uncompromising true crime
documentaries you are ever likely to endure. I first sat through it,
open-mouthed and muscle-tensed, at the beautiful old Capitol cinema in
Melbourne when it amazingly played there in 1982 (a strange environment for
such a viewing experience for sure), and again several times on videocassette
when it was released locally on the infamous Palace Explosive label a couple of
years later. It was a film that was both incredibly hard to watch but almost
impossible to turn away from. Even living as far away as Australia, it made me wabt to double-bolt my doors every time I watched it. And sadly, it is a film which is just as truthful
and relevant today, if not even more so.

Co-written by Leonard Schrader
and produced primarily for the Japanese market to cash-in on the success of the
notorious (but largely faked) Faces of
Death shockumentary, The Killing of
America documents in unflinching detail and honesty the rise in gun
violence, murder and sexual crimes in the land of the brave and the home of the
free. Concentrating mostly on the period between the assassination of JFK in
November of 1963 and the shooting death of John Lennon in December 1980 (years
which saw a marked increase in violence in the country), the film covers political
shootings, killing sprees, cult murders and mass suicides (such as Charles Manson
and Jonestown), serial killings (Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy and Ed Kemper), as
well as the Vietnam War and the protests over it on home soil which often
turned tragic (like Kent State). Director Sheldon Renan and editor Lee Percy assemble the film remarkably,
bludgeoning you into terrified submission with its continual parade of uncensored footage, crime scene
photographs and interviews with criminals (including Robert Kennedy’s assassin
Sirhan Sirhan and a chilling interview with incarcerated serial killer Ed
Kemper), as well as burnt-out ex-cops and young Sunset Strip prostitutes. Some
of the more infamous clips included in the film are the 8mm Zapruder film of
John F. Kennedy’s killing, and Vietnam police chief Nguyễn Ngọc Loan casually executing a Vietcong prisoner
in cold blood on the streets of Saigon on February 1, 1968.

Aurally,
The Killing of America is
almost as impactful as it is visually. Apart from Chuck Riley’s downbeat and
morose narration, which has a similar effect as the narration on many of those
gory driver education short films from the 1960s (such as Mechanized Death and Highways
of Agony), the film makes remarkably
effective use of the songs For What It’s
Worth by Buffalo Springfield (played over the Vietnam War and social protest
footage) and Homicide by English punk
band 999 (played over a montage of Sunset Strip street fighting and Hollywood
hookers describing confrontations with violent johns and the high prices that
an underage girl is likely to fetch). Mark Lindsay and W. Michael Lewis also
contribute a soundtrack score which features some piano and synthesizer sounds
that complement the onscreen mayhem perfectly, heightening the sense of fear
and dread that builds inside the viewer as the movie progresses.

Equally brutal in all its forms: Various VHS, DVD and Blu-ray releases
of THE KILLING OF AMERICA

Suppressed in the US since
audiences stumbled out sick and in shock from a screening at The Public Theatre
in New York in February 1982, The
Killing of America has now finally made its official American home video
debut thanks to Severin Films, who have issued the film in a stunning new
Blu-ray release that does this important documentary justice. The new 2K scan
preserves the original 1.33:1Aspect Ratio and does a
magnificent job of cleaning the film to give it a clarity that it has never had
before while preserving its documentary feel with some soft grain, particularly
in some of the older archive footage. Along with the original English language
version, the Severin Blu-ray also includes the longer Japanese cut of the film,
which runs for an extra 20 minutes and was titled Violence USA (though the Severin print still bears The Killing of America as its opening title). The Japanese version (presented here with the
original Japanese narration and optional English subtitles) makes more of an
attempt to examine the schizophrenic duality of American society, inserting
footage of a more playful America indulging in wholesome activities like roller
skating and skiing, along with some of its big technical achievements such as
space travel and the Moon landing, to juxtapose all the violence. Violence USA also opens with some breathtaking aerial shots exploring the country’s
natural beauty before moving to its concrete urban nightmares. There are a
couple of sequences on the Japanese version that are surprisingly missing from
the English one, in particular news footage of Muhammad Ali talking a potential
suicide victim from jumping off to top of a city building, and shots of Manson
disciple Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme’s attempted assassination of President Gerald Ford
in 1975.

Supplementary material on the Severin Blu-ray include the original
trailer and new and very interesting interviews with director Renan and editor Percy,
along with an audio commentary track with Renan (on the English version) and an
interview with Mondo movie fan and historian Nick Pinkerton, who weighs in of
the film and its place with the Mondo genre (a type of pseudo-documentary or
shockumentary which takes its name from the classic 1962 Italian film Mondo Cane). A limited version signed on the cover sleeve by the director is also available from the Severin Films website while stocks last.

A tough, challenging, and
haunting but utterly galvanizing viewing experience, one not likely to be soon
forgotten by anyone who chooses to brave it.

Ever since I was a kid, I've always loved checking out the local cinemas whenever I am on vacation. So last week Marneen and I visited the Ward 16 theatres in Waikiki to check out Dr. Strange. The cinema was lovely, reclining leather chairs with foot rests and a retractable table for food and beverages. We both really enjoyed the movie, which succesfully captured the essence of this reasonably obscure (to the masses) comic book character while also making him relatable and appealing to a wide commercial audience. Great casting by Benedict Cumberbatch in the title role, and was lovely to see the very trippy visuals paying tribute to some of those classic mind-bending panels which the great Steve Ditko dreamed up for the Doctor's early 1960s comic book adventures. Certainly, Chris Nolan's Inception may have been the clear inspiration for some of the sequences depicting large cityscapes morphing, but Dr. Strange ups the ante and takes it to a whole new level. Easily one of the best Marvel movies to date for me. The only distraction for me is that Benedict Wong's voice reminded me so much of the voice used for Curt Jergens' Stromberg villain in the 1977 Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me.

Destined to be a stoner's classic. Will definately try to check Dr. Strange out again before it leaves the cinemas - in IMAX 3D if I can.

Along with paranormal activities, UFOs and unexplained phenomena (such as the Bermuda Triangle disappearances), mythical monsters like Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster and the Yeti (aka the Abominable Snowman) became a big pop culture talking point during the 1970s. Whether it was covered on TV (in shows like In Search Of..., hosted by Leonard Nimoy), in cheap mass-market paperbacks or documentary films (such as the low-rent classic The Mysterious Monsters), the world became obsessed with what was hiding deep beneath the waters of Scotland, of high up within the woods of the American Pacific Northwest.

One television movie which cashed-in on all the hysteria, as well as riding the coattails of popular movies like JAWS, was Snowbeast, a 1977 movie directed by Herb Wallerstein and starring Bo Svenson, Yvette Mimieux and Robert Logan. Written by Psycho and The Outer Limits scriptwriter Joseph Stefano, Snowbeast has a strange Bigfoot/Yeti hybrid picking off skiers at a popular Colorado ski resort, just as it is about to host its 50th Annual Winter Carnival (these monsters sure know when to pick the right time to attack).

Snowbeast is one of the movies which I will be discussing at the upcoming Made for TV Mayhem panel event happening at Monster Fest on the evening of Saturday, November the 26th. Joining myself will be Amanda Reyes, Kier-La Janisse and Lee Gambin, as well as Marneen Fields (actress and former stuntwoman who worked on a number of TV movies in the 1970s/80s). We will be discussing the world of American TV movies (mostly from the 1970s/80s), showing lots of clips and using the event as the launch for the upcoming Headpress book Are You in the Hous Alone?, which was edited by Amanda and features written contributions from Kier-La, Lee and myself. Special advance hardcover copies of the book will be available to purchase and have signed at the event, which will be followed by a screening of Buzz Kulick’s bizarre cult classic TV movie from 1974, Bad Ronald.

Should be a fun and informative evening, and one of the many cool highlights of this year’s Monster Fest!

After watching Chuck Russell's fun 1988 remake of The Blob yesterday, I decided to continue on and watch the 1972 sequel Son of Blob, which is also included on Umbrella's new limited blu-ray release of the original 1958 film and its '88 remake (though only in standard definition and 4:3 aspect ratio). The print on the Umbrella release actually bears the film's alternate title of Beware! The Blob.

If you came into the movie without any knowledge of its history or production, you would swear that Son of Blob was the result of a bunch of college kids heading out for a weekend on the pot and deciding on the spur of the moment to grab a friend's 8mm home movie camera and dream up a horror movie on the spot. But then you realize that it was actually directed by I Dream of Jeannie and Dallas star Larry Hagman, and features performances from the likes of Burgess Meredith, Carol Lynley, Cindy Williamms, Dick Van Pattern, Sid Haig and other recognizable faces and names, and you wonder what must have been going through their heads while the film was being shot.

From what I've read about the production of the film, a lot of it was improvised, and I recall reading a recent interview with one of Larry Hagman's kids stating that he was a big pothead, which may help explain why this film turned out as strange as it did. As either a horror film or a comedy it is very lackluster, but it does have its own weird little charm about it, and it is certainly a real curio and a definite product of its time.

The oldest home viewing edition of The Blob (1958) along with the latest. Limited to 2300 numbered copies (I scored #982), the new local 2 disc 1080P blu-ray set from Umbrella is pretty good, not only contains the classic Steve McQueen original but also the belated and more comedic 1972 sequel Son of Blob (aka Beware! The Blob), as well as Chuck Russell's underrated 1988 remake. Watched the remake this morning and had forgotten what a cool little 80s gorror gem it is, well worth another look. Anything with Candy Clark in it is usually has something going for it.

Based on the true story of a conscientious objector who served as a medic (without carrying or firing a weapon) in the ferocious battle for Okinawa during the last days of World War Two, Hacksaw Ridge is a stunning return to form for director Mel Gibson. Brutal, uncompromising and poignant, it easily takes its place alongside some of the great war films of the modern era, including Platoon, Full Metal Jacket and Saving Private Ryan (all of which it bears some similarities with). Great performances from former Spider-Man Andrew Garfield (an Oscar-worthy turn), Vince Vaughn, Hugo Weaving and Rachel Griffiths. Even the usually insufferable Sam Worthington is excellent. Definitely at the top of the 2016 film heap.

Received my director-signed new Severin Blu-ray release of the brutal 1981 documentary The Killing of America today, looking forward to checking it out over the weekend, have read some great reviews of it so far.

Also terrific to hear that Ex Film are panning a local Blu-ray and limited VHS release of the movie for early next year, hopefully along with some cinema screenings.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Since his premature death from
heart disease at the age of only 54 in 1978, much has been written and
documented about the life and work of Edward D. Wood Jr., the infamous
low-budget filmmaker responsible for such mind-bending and unique cult gems as Glen or Glenda (1953) and Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959). Wood’s
oeuvre and eccentric personal life has been thoroughly dissected and discussed
in print and a number of documentaries, as well as Tim Burton’s acclaimed (if
somewhat fantasised) 1994 biopic Ed Wood,
starring Johnny Depp in the title role and Martin Landau in an Oscar-winning
turn as a broken and brittle Bela Lugosi (whom Wood befriended and threw some
work to during the famed horror star’s sad last days).

With all this interest, you would
think that the Ed Wood archives had been well and truly plundered and exhausted
by now. But Wood’s twilight years, spent in an alcoholic haze across various
Hollywood dives and crash pads, saw the angora-loving writer and filmmaker
struggling to eke out a living in the porno netherworld, his prolific fingers
banging out a string of unique adult paperbacks on his old IBM Executive
typewriter while also directing a slew of quickie sex films, both soft and
hardcore, to help keep his tab at the local Pla-Boy Liquour Store ticking over.
Unfortunately, a lot of these books and films were written and directed under pseudonyms
(or often lacking any credits at all, in the case of many of his sex film
shorts), giving Wood’s fans and archaeologists a tough job when trying to
compile a complete filmography and bibliography.

Thanks to the efforts of New York
based filmmaker and exploitation historian Keith Crocker, the Ed Wood
filmography moves a step closer to completion with the discovery of a number of
his Super 8mm porn film loops, which have now been made available through
Crocker’s important boutique film label Cinefear Video. Filmed between 1973/74
for the famous Swedish Erotica company, this collection of grimy hardcore XXX shorts
were originally produced for home movie sale (advertised in the back pages of
men’s magazines), as well as shown in the burgeoning porno cinemas and adult
book shops, where they were screened in peep booths and coin-fed viewing
machines (in the later, they would play continuously, hence their popular term
of ‘loops’).

Above: the young John Holmes

Taken at face value on their own
terms, the collection of 10 loops presented here are fairly indicative of and
standard for the grainy, low-rent porn material of the day. Swedish Erotica did have a bit of a
reputation for (comparative) quality, but these films were produced when the
company was still in its infancy, and in fact were the first series of loops
which they produced for the commercial market. Each loop runs for around 10-12
minutes in length, and were directed by Wood in the San Fernando Valley area. Originally
shot in 16mm, they would later be transferred to 8mm and offered for sale.
Filmed in silent with subtitles added (like they were needed), some suitably
retro porn fuzz instrumental rock has been dubbed in for some extra mood on
this collection. Like many loops, they often start off with a brief outdoors
sequence before quickly moving into the boudoir or lounge room and getting
straight down to the action. Featuring titles like Wet and Wild, Western Lust,
Devil Cult and Girl on a Bike, one of the more interesting things about these
early Swedish Erotica loops - apart from the fact that Ed Wood was in the director's chair - is the appearance of the legendary John (Johnny
Wadd) Holmes is several of them (Hollywood
Starlet, Behind the Ate Ball and
the two-part The Virgin Next Door),
leading one to imagine what a meeting and working relationship between Wood and
the Wadd must have been like. And anyone who has seen Wood’s 1971 adult feature
Necromania (released in both
softcore and XXX versions) will recognise the bizarre owl eyes wall prop from that
feature, which turns up in The Virgin
Next Door (as a device which allows John Holmes to peep on his sexy
neighbour).

Running at nearly two hours, Ed Wood’s 8mm Porn Loops may not make for particularly arousing erotica, but is an
important compilation and artefact of its type, a recommended and worthy acquisition for both
fans of Wood as well as those with an interest and fascination in the early
days of hardcore filmmaking (even if the interest extends no further than a
simple enjoyment of its visual and aural sleaze 'n’ cheese).

Any film fans who are based in Melbourne, Australia may want to get along to the beautiful old Astor Theatre in St. Kilda on Wednesday, September 28 to see Marneen Fields and John Harrison introduce the screening of Clint Eastwood's The Gauntlet (1977), which the cinema is screening that night, as a second feature to Bruce Lee's classic 1974 martial arts film Enter the Dragon. John will be providing the introduction to The Gauntlet before bringing Marneen up onto the stage to talk about her amazing stunt work on the film. After the screening, audiences will be able to say hello to Marneen in the theatre's foyer, pose for photos, and check out the range of rare vintage memorabilia from The Gauntlet that will be on display. Don't miss out on this very special event, and if you have The Gauntlet on VHS, DVD or Blu-ray, feel free to bring it (or any other items you may have from the film) along to have it signed!

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Looking over some of my contributions to the latest issue of Weng's Chop (#9), which arrived in the post today. Apart from my own pieces (including some blaxploitation reviews and an article on 70s disaster movies, accompanied by an interview with Marneen Fields regarding her acting and stuntwork on several big disaster flicks), there is a stack of great-looking stuff in this massive 234 page issue.

Nice to see a strong Australian presence within its pages, with a continuation of Andrew Leavold's examination of Filipino action/exploitation filmmaker Bobby Suarez, and an interview with Mark Savage regarding his latest (excellent) feature film, Stressed to Kill.

Canadian writer/artist/publisher/adult film historian Robin Bougie (Cinema Sewer) is also interviewed in this issue, Dawn Dabell examines the 1970 British-West German film Deep End, and I'm especially looking forward to reading Stephen Bissette's article on vintage adult paperbacks that revolved around a horror theme.

There's a less expensive B&W edition of Weng's Chop available, but I strongly recommend forking out the extra bucks for the full color edition if you can. It looks stunning and the pages just pop out at you. A great job by designer Tim Paxton and the rest of the WC team (Tony Strauss, Brian Harris, et al).

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Have just completed a review of the 1985 grindhouse film Hellhole, which has just made its official Blu-ray and DVD debut on the Scream Factory label, and in which Marneen Fields has a prominent co-starring role as Curry, the poor young religious insanity victim who is dragged off to the Hellhole (an illegal experimental facility located at a women's sanatorium) to face unspeakable horrors. Marneen gained great recognition and notices for her performance in this film, and the clip of her scene on the gurney in the Hellhole has racked up over half a million views on You Tube. It's great to see Hellhole finally available in an uncut hi-def transfer, after having to sit through grainy VHS tapes and fuzzy bootleg DVDs for years.

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Received my contributor's copy of Monster! 28/29 in the post today, a huge 220 paged double issue beast. My contributions to this issue include an article on the short-lived 1960s monster mag Shriek! and a look at the Filipino horror flicks Blood of the Vampires and The Twilight People, but there is so much more within the pages of this issue to digest. Another mighty effort from Tim Paxton, Brian Harris, Steve Fenton and crew. Daniel Best continues to dig up obscure and fascinating information in the second part of his article on the 1929 Australian stage production of Dracula, Troy Howarth takes a look at a trio of unique Jess Franco monster mashes, and Stephen Bissette provides an in-depth look at made-for-TV horror.

Saturday, August 13, 2016

When my lovely American wife Marneen is here in Melbourne with me she is forever worried about leaving a window wide open in case one of our little local possums should make a leap through from one of the surrounding trees or fences and cause all sorts of untold horror. It has inspired me to write a horror fiction story about a plague of infected possums who terrorize the St. Kilda area of 1975, picking off derelicts, streetwalkers, pushers and the odd Luna Park employee.

I'm going to call it Ringtails and write it in homage to those great lurid eco-horror paperbacks pulps from the 1970/early-80s, authored by the likes of Guy N. Smith, James Herbert and Shaun Hutson.

Here's the opening paragraph:

"When they first came out of the darkness en masse, they were already rabid, ravenous, and completely out of control. No one was really sure how or why the problem first started, but it was clear that it had been festering for some time. With a random shrug of her fickle shoulders, Mother Nature had decided to mutate and descend a new horror down upon us, and used as its testing grounds the unsuspecting populace of the Melbourne bayside suburb of St. Kilda."

Earlier this year I was lucky enough to get the job writing the booklet essays for local Blu-ray releases from Glass Doll Films of Thirst (1979) and Dead Kids (1982). I am happy to announce that I have been asked back to compose the essays for two more of the company's upcoming releases from the vaults of the legendary Australian exploitation producer Antony I. Ginnane.

The movies I will be writing about this time around are Snapshot (1979), a Simon Wincer-directed thriller starring a young Sigrid Thornton as a fashion model stalked by a psycho driving a Mr. Whippy ice cream van. This was the film that was released in the USA under the completely misleading title of The Day After Halloween. It was also released as One More Minute.

The other release I will be working on is The Survivor (1981), a big-budget (for Australian cinema at the time) adaptation of James Herbert's 1976 supernatural horror novel of the same name, directed by actor David Hemmings and featuring Joseph Cotten in his final role.

Am looking forward to diving in and and re-evaluating these two films. Have dug out my paperback tie-in of Snapshot and Signet printing of The Survivorto re-read, and digging up some exotic poster art, such as these two samples from Thailand (Snapshot) and Turkey (The Survivor).

The first of these two films should see release from Glass Doll towards the end of the year (which suddenly doesn't seem that far off).